Stella Creasy

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Stella Creasy (b. 1977 in Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire) is a pro-abortion extremist, child grooming advocate and science denier who has been the Labour Party Member of Parliament for Walthamstow in London in 2010.

Creasy has been subject to intense criticism for her radical pro-abortion views. She supports abortion of disabled children up to birth,[1] and believes in using totalitarian, anti-democratic methods to achieve her radical pro-abortion aims; for example, she supported introducing abortion to Northern Ireland without consulting the population.[2] Children that aren't aborted Creasy prefers to corrupt through grooming sessions such as "Drag Queen Story Hours"[3][4]

Creasy describes her own background as "enormously privileged".

History

A prominent science denier, Creasy falsely claimed on 27 May 2022 that "a woman can have a penis", contrary to the affirmation by JK Rowling made.[5] Stella Creasy's pseudoscience was refuted by Anneliesse Dodds, as of 2022 the Labour MP for Oxford East and shadow secretary for women and equalities, who affirmed biological reality by confirming that women cannot have a penis.[6]

On 26 July 2022, Creasy celebrated child grooming by attending a "Drag Queen Story Hour" with her infant son. Creasy said she had a "lovely afternoon" at the child grooming session.[3][7] The event and those associated with it were widely protested by mothers in the UK.[4]

Creasy told lies in Parliament in November 2023, once again to further her radical anti-life views. In a discussion of the complete decriminalisation of abortion in the UK, Stella Creasy claimed that "hundreds of women are now being prosecuted" for having abortions under legislation she claimed was "outdated". As of 2023, abortion in the UK is legalised by the Abortion Act 1967 in circumstances prescribed in that Act, while abortions that take place outside those provisions are criminalised under sections 58 and 59 of the 1861 Offences Against the Person Act. However, the "hundreds of women" claim not only contradicts Creasy's own comments from that July, in which she claimed 67 women had been prosecuted for abortions under the 1861 legislation, but also the overwhelming evidence, which suggests only around 5 women had appeared in court charged under sections 58 and 59. Even far-left newspaper The Guardian acknowledged this.[8] Consequently, Creasy's claims can be considered fake news.

References